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Bangladesh

Bangladesh Enacts Landmark Microfinance Bank Law

Khabor Wala Desk

Published: 31st January 2026, 4:28 AM

Bangladesh Enacts Landmark Microfinance Bank Law

Bangladesh has taken a decisive step to formalise its microfinance sector with the enactment of the Microfinance Bank Act, 2026, introduced under the caretaker government. The legislation integrates microcredit operations into the mainstream banking system, bringing them under the supervision of the central bank, while granting authorised banks the right to accept deposits and mandating adherence to social business principles.

Previously, most microfinance institutions (MFIs) in Bangladesh operated under limited oversight from the Microcredit Regulatory Authority (MRA) and relied heavily on donor grants and wholesale loans. The new law grants microfinance banks the legal authority to accept deposits not only from borrowers but also from individual and institutional investors, a move aimed at increasing financial inclusion, enhancing sector stability, and establishing sustainable economic models for low-income communities.

The legislation also emphasises high capital requirements, transparent governance, and operational integrity, while providing a framework for the consolidation or restructuring of smaller MFIs. For larger institutions, it ensures clear policy guidelines and formal recognition.

Key Provisions of the Microfinance Bank Act, 2026

Feature Introduced Requirement
Authorised Capital BDT 5,000 million (50 million shares × BDT 100 each)
Minimum Paid-up Capital BDT 2,000 million; ≥60% shares held by borrowers, remainder by other investors
Ownership Structure Borrowers must hold at least 60% of shares post-establishment
Social Business Model Investors receive only capital repayment; surplus profits directed to social development fund
Board Composition 10 members: 4 borrower representatives, 3 investors, 2 independent directors nominated by Bangladesh Bank, plus managing director (non-voting)
Loan Recovery Policy 15-day notice mandatory; encourages rescheduling, restructuring, or alternative dispute resolution; coercion prohibited
Definition of Small Enterprise ≤25 employees, assets ≤ BDT 15 million

The law incorporates Professor Muhammad Yunus’s Nobel Prize-winning social business model, promoting poverty alleviation, financial self-reliance, and small enterprise development. Any surplus revenue generated by microfinance banks must be reinvested into social development projects, ensuring that economic growth is coupled with social welfare.

To protect borrowers, the legislation mandates a 15-day notice period before any action, a structured loan rescheduling process, and compulsory non-coercive dispute resolution. By legalising deposit-taking and embedding social responsibility within banking operations, the Microfinance Bank Act, 2026, aims to establish a transparent, accountable, and sustainable financial ecosystem for Bangladesh’s low-income population.

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